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April 10, 1974 - Image 2

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1974-04-10

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Pc'ge Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, April 10, 1974

P6ge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 1 a; 1974

Todd speaks on fish farming

MUSKET
COUNTERPOINT
RECORD ALBUMS
NOW ON SALE! IN THE
UAC OFFICES-2nd Floor
of Michigan Union

(Continued from Page 1)
sociate with other people besides
those who think like us," he ex-
plained.
Todd showed color slides of New
Alchemy in Cape Cod. The slides
showed heated fish ponds, thrivhig
gardens bordered with flowers, geo-
desic domes and playing children.
The moderately large audience
grew receptive to Todd and his
utopian community as the lecture
progressed. Todd read most of his
lecture haltingly, but was warm
and open during the question per-
iod.
WHEN ASKED for written ma-

terials further describing New Al-
chemy, Todd lefft the stage to
retrieve the papers from his brief-
case. At least half the audience
crowded the stage for copies when
Todd returned and announced they
were available.
Pleased by audience reaction to
his fresh-air-and-sunshine commun-

ity, Todd nutshelled the purpose of
his community. "New Alchemy is
people working together to try to
make realities out of common fan-
tasies," he said, wrinkling his sun-
burned face into a smile. "We are
working so that our children can
build on our shoulders and not cut
of our rubble."

Dean clears students in
medical school scandal

ONLY $3.00

For info. 763-1107

(Continued from Page 1) ,
mation turned up by the commit-
tee continued the investigation and
found four students primarily re-
sponsible for the rumors.
The Honor Council sent the fourj
letters of reprimand, and recom-
mended further action be taken by
the school.
The decision to exonorate the
four, who remain unnamed, came
as the executive committee of the
Medical School "rejected the find-
ings and recommendations of the
Honors Council on both substantive
and procedural grounds."
"The executive committee," the
faculty group which makes final
p o I i c y decisions, "was not con-
vinced by the evidence the Honors
Council was willing to present,"
according to Dr. CharlesrVotaw,
assistant Dean for Currimulm,
IN ADDITION, the Executive
Committee felt that there had been
procedural errors which invali-
dated the findings. The students
involved were not notified of the
charges against them, and were
given no chance to defend them-
selves, according to Votaw.
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t 10 days of lift tickets
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MEET:
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Trip extra include: fantastic corn
snow, swim suit skiing, on slope
wine/cheese parties, hot mineral
springs, gr ea t hikingcharcoal
cooked dinners. etc.

Honor Council Chairman John
Fink refused to go into detail about
the matter last night, but said that
although he "would have liked to
see the executive committee go
along with our wishes entirely, we
are satisfied with the actions
taken.
"We felt we had enough reason,
from talking to students, faculty
and staff to believe that these
people had done what we said they
had done," he continued.
The reversal of the Council's
findings was due in part to the ex-
ecutive committee's distance from
the affair, and the inability to "get
the gist of the matter on paper,"
according to Fink.
"We were at the interviews. They
were not," he added.,
Fink said.the .fo urhad acted
"through their own lack of fore-
sight, without malicious intent."
He would not comment on what
the four had actually done saying
only that the Honors Council had,
by talking with students and the
accused "judged that these four'
were in violation of the honors
code."

AP Photo
A feeling f or horses
Agitator Jack, a thoroughbred race horse, is introduced to a pair of blind children at Hialeah Park,
Fla. The two were part of a group brought to visit horses by members of the Florida Lions who are
raising funds for a vacation spot for the visually handicapped.
DIVORCE UP ALSO
Marriages rising in Europe

iherek
thru
Classfied

GENEVA (Reuter) - The insti-
tution of marriage is more popular
than ever in Europe and is suc-
cessfully riding the storm of mod-
ern permissive society, according'
to a survey by the United Nations,
the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the Economic Com-
mission for Europe (ECE).
More and more couples in both
East and West Europe are heading
for church altars or registry of-
fices, although increasing numbers
are also regretting their martial
vows, getting divorced and shying
away from marriage, it said.
THE THREE international bodies
reported that East Europeans are
generally the keenest on marriage,
that an increasing number of S--an-
dinavians appear to be living to-
gether before tying the marital
knot, and that the biggest current
boom in marriages is in the Soviet
Union.

Marriage is most common in
Bulgaria, where 73.7 per cent of
women over 15 are wed. In Ro-
mania, just over 30 per cent of
women considered eligible-at least
by the statisticians-are spins-ers.
It is least favored in Finland and
Austria, where only about 55 per
cent of women over 15 settle down
with a marriage partner, the sur-
vey revealed.
Of the Northern European coun-
tries only Sweden showed a de-

Europeans are getting the mar-
riage bug at a younger age. too,
the only exceptions being Bul-
garia and Yugoslavia where peo-
ple had developed this habit sev-
eral decades ago.
It is interesting to note a dis-
tinet upward inflexion of the
(chart) cunrves in Denmark and
Sweden in the mid-1960's probably
associated with the spreading
practice among young people to
co-habit without formal contract

There's only one place where you'll be proud to
have a sandwich . . . Scotty's. Who wouldn't be
proud to taste a star-spangled Brawny Roast Beef
with layers of thinly sliced, juicy, roast beef, special
seasoning, and a toasted sesame-seed bun?
3352 WASHTENAW AVENUE
(UST UP FROM ARBORLAND)

e

- ELECTION -
UNIVERSITY HOUSING COUNCIL
VACANCI ES-All seats; 1/2 year term. President
and 7 Dorm Districts.
ELIGIBILITY-All Candidates must be residents of
University Housing.
FILING AND PETITION DEADLINE-April 16 at
4:00p.m.
HOW AND WHERE-All Candidates must sign list
at the SGC Office, 3rd floor, Michigan Union.
WHEN-The election will be held during pre-
registration.
For more information, call-Alan Bercovitz, Election direc-
tar, 764-7705, David Faye, UHC President, 764-6634.
- GET INVOLVED ---
GIVE A DAMN ABOUT WHERE YOU LIVE!

crease in the number of marciages of marriage," the report said.
per head of "eligible" women,
while in the Netherlands the figure ON AVERAGE, women in Scan-
leaped from 78.3 per 1,000 spinsrers dinavia, Englands and Wales are
a year in the 1960s to 100.5 in the marrying now when they are about
early 1970s. 24 or 25 years old, compared with
about 26 or 27 during the last dec-
THERE HAS BEEN a contin- ade. Around 1970 the lowest mar-
uous increase in the prooortion of rying ages - about 23 - were re-
married women and a consequent corded in Bulgaria and Romania
decline in the single state in vir- and the highest - over 25-in Ire-
tually all European countries,' the land, Sweden and Switzerland.
report commented.Diocsaegnrlyira-
FCE officials who released the Dimg staresgeneally encreas-
report as background material to g with the sharpest rises since
world population year in 1914 ,i1960 in Eastern Europe, Norway,
advance of a fuller survey to'be Finland, Britain and Belgium. In
published by U.N. headquarters in ocialist countries, Denmark, Aus-
Iew York next year, said that par- tria and Sweden, at least one in
ticularly striking was the increase every seven women who marries
in the number of marriages in the now will end up divorced, the re-
Soviet Union. port stated.
More than 70 - Around 1970 in the Soviet Union,
Moretha 70per cent of So- where the" divorce rate in also
viet females in the 45-49 age group comparatively high, more than
were married, compared with twice as many women are being
about 55 per cent in the 1960's, divorced than 10 years previously.
they said.
THE DIVORCE RATES are
largely a function of social legis-
lation and the trends in Eastern
Europe can be attributed in the
main to the relaxation of the laws
on divorce," the three organiza-
tions reported.
An instance of the effect of re-
strictive legislation is provided by
Romania, where the crude divorce
rate on the period 1966-70 was
about one-quarter of thatprevail-
ing previously," they added.
amAN The - report said . that couples
whose marriages break up adopt
the maxim: "Once bitten twice
shy."

r* r1r*,tyt r** 7t*ytyt

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FRIDAY, April 12
8 p.m.-HILL AUDITORIUM
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"Hire him. He's got great legs."
If women thought this way about men they tists, political candidates, professors and com-
would be awfully silly. pany presidents, any other Viewpoint is ridic-
When men think this way about women ulous.
they're silly, too. Think of it this way. When we need all
M r r. +ka koln %AA mrn a+ .wh1/ wnet hrlf thou hrnins

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